Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Is spiritual care a reform that spans the health-care divide?

Posted at 04:39 PM ET, 11/05/2012

Nov
05, 2012 09:39 PM EST

TheWashingtonPost

Is spiritual care a reform that
spans the health-care divide?

By Tony
Lobl

Health-care reform - just two simple words.
But the simplicity of the phrase belies the fact it is an issue that has
convulsed the nation, commanding an untold number of column inches and consuming
a massive amount of airtime.

Throughout the presidential campaign passions have continued to run high. As
Election Day looms the issue remains one of the most contentious dividing the
voters.

But for many people to whom “being healthy” seems a distant memory despite
the best medical attention, these political skirmishes fall short of the mark.

To them, the heart of the matter is: “How can I get better?”

For many people, no amount of
political tinkering with the medical status quo is going to provide a
satisfactory answer to that question. That is why, despite their regular
insurance payments,

Americans are paying out another $33 billion from
their own pockets every year for non-medical methods of treatment.

Perhaps more poignantly, even
healthcare workers regularly choose other means for themselves. Research has shownthree quarters of them “use some form
of complementary or alternative medicine or practice to help stay healthy”.
That’s a greater proportion than among the general public.

One of those non-medical
methods is itself a process of reform - namely mind-body medicine, or changing the way one thinks.

“Between 2002 and 2007, the percentage of adults who prayed for
their health increased from 43 percent to 49 percent. An earlier study found the
percentage of people who prayed for their health in 1999 was 13.7 percent,
indicating a dramatic boost in this practice over those 10 years.”

To me, the best health-giving
prayer is the kind Jesus practiced so effectively, according to the Scriptures.
There is no record of him pleading for a miracle but plenty of evidence of the
benefits of his call for individual reform. Of course, he used the word
“repent”, which admittedly has taken on some heavy religious connotations over
the centuries. But his original meaning was much more positive, according to author and syndicated columnist
Suzette
Martinez Standring. She said it pointed to a willingness to adopt a “new and
life-changing mindset”, adding that “the word itself signified
self-transformation, not self-blame”.

The prayer approach to mental reform I use has proved
consistently effective for me during three entirely drugless decades and has
left me feeling less tied to the winds of political change.

While not everyone would opt for prayer as their primary health care
alternative, for many, the heart’s yearning for health holds within itself a
deeper, more soulful aspiration than just medically managing symptoms. They want
clinicians and other health care workers to mine the resource of what’s
“significant or sacred” in their lives to help the healing process. For such
people - from all sides of the political spectrum - a more spiritual framework
within the current health care system is a constructive reform that could be
implemented independent of either imposing new budget restraints or pandering to
profligacy.

Indeed, spirituality in this
broader sense is increasingly being recognized as an invaluable resource in
helping to put people back on the road to health. For example, in recent years “a growing body of
research investigating the relationship between religion, spirituality and
health has led to a number of evidence-based guidelines for spiritual care and
tools to help hospitals provide it”.

In addition, 90 percent of U.S. medical schools have courses
or content on spirituality and health.

Health-care debates are too often conducted as epic political battles built
on the presumption that all reform roads simply lead to new and better medical
models. But if spirituality is a key component in getting better, then there
remains an option for reform that will not cost big bucks but can make a
significant difference.

However, it will demand an investment of the heart on the part of doctors,
nurses and others working in the health care system to recognize and respond to
the individuality of the patient, including their deeper spiritual needs.

Health-care reform in two simple words? “More spirituality!”

Tony Lobl, spirituality and health
blogger and district manager and media and legislative liaison for Christian
Science in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Follow on Twitter at @tonylobl.